Pages

Friday, August 30, 2013

Ace Antonio Hall is back. Hooray!

I am so happy that Ace
Antonio Hall has agreed to come back to Choices. He wrote a wonderful piece
about the gray haired women in his life in July and got a huge readership.
Please take a look here. His writing is endearing and insightful and so, so loving.

Today, he’s going to discuss
his novel, Confessions of Sylva Slasher
and try to convince us to read it. Thank you, Ace, for being so generous with
your answers.

Ace:
Reading my novel, Confessions of Sylva
Slasher, is like drinking a large exhilarating can of fun, with an added
lemon twist on the end! It's a coming-of-age story about a young girl who has
to realize that she doesn't need any guy to validate her, the power comes from
within. Once Sylva gets that, she faces her fears with courage and is able to
overcome her “undead” challenges she calls deadheads. Listen, I grew up
enamored with Alfred Hitchcock stories, and watching the Twilight Zone, so
speculative fiction, and creating page-turning cliffhangers have become a part
of my DNA.

Madeline:
Why do you love that genre?

Ace:
To me, zombie stories speaks on different levels outside of horror: the state
of the world, humanity's fear of the unknown regarding death and the future of
our society. Many undead stories are commentaries on the way corporate and
government machines literally have us stumbling through our daily lives like
mindless zombies while their economic power stumbles our ability to speak out
or resist quick enough to gain any true momentum in our own lives. Then again,
I want my readers to finish the book feeling satisfied, and happy that they
bought a Sylva slasher novel, and for me, writing about zombies allows me to do
that.

In fact, many people who didn't really like
zombie stories before have come back after buying my novel and said they can't
wait for the sequel because they enjoyed reading a story that was fun, yet
touched on other issues. It reminds me of the commentary I hear about the AMC
show The Walking Dead, where people say the plot is not about the danger of the
zombies but the danger between the survivors and how they deal with the
apocalypse. That's exactly the way I tried to write a Sylva Slasher novel.

Madeline:
When and why did you make the transition from song producer, performer, actor
to writer?

Ace:
One of the reasons, I honor, write and champion the female species is because I
grew up with my grandmother. I saw all the trials and tribulations she went
through, and being that she took me into her home when she was
seventy-years-old, I saw many of her challenges. That's why I fall in love with
stories or games with strong female protagonists. Take for instance, the video
games Tomb Raider or Resident Evil, which both feature female characters. I
will always tell stories that deal with the terrible conditions women go
through and the triumphs they overcome. It speaks to my heart.

My grandmother introduced the Rat Pack to me,
and so Frank Sinatra, Dean Martin, & Sammy Davis, Jr. left an imprint in my
makeup, as well as Fred Astaire. They all came from vaudeville-like
backgrounds, singing, dancing and acting for audiences, so it was inevitable
that I got a degree in film making, while I produced and performed music. I
taught school and became an actor, and translated my many experiences in drama,
and love for horror, into writing.

Truth be told, my real middle name is Nzondi, an
African name given to me by my father, and growing up, many of my friends
called me zombie. It's true what they say about being careful how you treat
authors because many of those who teased me have become horrible decapitated
zombies in my novels. (insert Vincent Price laugh here)

Madeline:
Sylva Slasher is traditionally published. Please tell us how you found your
publisher.

Ace:
For one, there's no easy answer. David Gerrold, who wrote the Star Trek
Original Series classic, Trouble With Tribbles, told me that until I wrote one
million words, it was all practice. Well, I wrote about eight-hundred-thousand
before getting a deal. The first few novels were really crappy, and it took me
a while to learn how to write a good story that even people that didn't
normally like the genre were intrigued to read.

Part of getting Confessions of Sylva Slasher
published by a traditional publisher, was my involvement with a writing society
that introduced me to award-winning authors, and their informative panels on
writing. Also attending conferences, continually crafting and polishing my
writing with classes and workshops, in which I learned how to write effective
query letters, and networked with people who shared their personal experiences
of success and inspirations.

I also joined a critique group that was
instrumental in my writing process. Here's a link to an article I wrote as a
guest blogger here:

A literary agent told me to read in the genre
that I wrote so that I would understand the tropes of zombie fiction, so I set
out to read over 50 stories and books to get an innate sense of what was
relevant, ridiculous, outdated, trendy and paying homage to the genre. However,
and perhaps most crucial was my focus. After Ray Bradbury told me to visit the
library daily and write, write write, I went from writing 1,500 words a day to
3,000 words. My focus got so strong, I woke up at 4 a. m., every morning and
wrote before going to work, and I buried myself in the library and/or corner of
a Starbucks from opening to sometimes closing. On many, many Saturdays, I went
to Starbucks and put in 12-15 hours of work in one painfully, butt and
back-burning sitting to get my writing done.

The story is about a teenage martial
artist/necromancer who has many internal conflicts and challenges to overcome
and I dedicated the book to Ray Bradbury for inspiring me to finish it, which
is ironic because the publisher is Montag, who is a character in Mr. Bradbury's
book Fahrenheit 451. Talk about match made in heaven.

Madeline:
What other writing projects do you have in the works?

Ace:
I have a short story called Dead Chick Walking being published by Calliope
Magazine coming out this fall. Currently, I am working on a Sylva Slasher
sequel called Crystal Coffin, which includes a short story I wrote called
Raising Mary, which is about the calamities that occur when an eight-year-old
rich girl hires Sylva to raise her famous ancestor, Mary Shelley from the
grave, as one of the girl's last wishes, who is gravely ill from leukemia. The
entire novel uses Raising Mary as back-story and involves a larger plot, but
the formula for making the story full of fun, action/adventure, terrifying
zombies, and stomach-turning twists will be the same. My hope is that everyone
who buys a Sylva Slasher novel will enjoy it thoroughly and will spread the
word.

Madeline:
I met you at The Greater Los Angeles Writers Society events. What is your role
there? Do you recommend writers join professional societies like GLAWS and why?

Ace:
When I first started, I was just a volunteer, but my role soon grew to events
chairman, to a critique group leader, to vice president of the entire
organization. After about two years, of spreading myself thin, I re-calibrated
my focus and worked solely on finishing the rewrites of my novel. Because of
all the people I met and learned from, I was able to make my novel a fun,
page-turning story with characters that come off of the page and into the
reader's living room. I never would've been able to write the book I did and
get so many wonderful reviews without having joined GLAWS.

I recommend writers to seek out professional writing societies
in their area or online. The networking, events, panels, and conferences are
extremely valuable. Authors should congregate with other writers every
available moment he/she comes out of their cave. Every great writer has a
contemporary he/she shared ideas, drinks, and laughs with, I believe. It helps
the author to truly evolve and create circles that are bound in success.

Novel
Synopsis:

SPRING BREAK GETS WILD ON THE LIVELIEST CRUISE IN
THE PACIFIC UNTIL THE UNDEAD CRASH THE PARTY.

Eighteen-year-old Sylva
Fleischer and her friends raise the dead for a living for police investigations
and mourning families. Two years after her high school crush, a hot guy named
Brandon, is assumed dead, Sylva’s friends convince her to go on a spring break
cruise in an effort to suppress her depression over him. But when passengers
mysteriously die and reanimate into flesheating zombies like she’s never seen
before, Sylva plunges into a horrifying struggle between a ship infested with
the undead and the scariest thing of all: a second chance with Brandon after
she discovers he’s still alive. This is a zombie story that eats right to the
core and leaves you licking your chops for more.

Got
zombies? Sylva Slasher does...

“[Ace] wastes no time
immersing us in full, gore-spattered, Technicolor horror… The tension is almost
unbearable…” – Leslie Ann Moore, author of Griffin’s Daughter.

Ace’s Bio

Soon after being cast as the lead in the senior class play, Ace Antonio
Hall got the acting bug and earned a BFA from Long Island University, New York
with a concentration on acting and screenwriting. Inspired by his father, Chris
Acemandese Hall, who penned the lyrics to the jazz classic, "So
What," sung by Eddie Jefferson, and his sister, Carol Lynn Brown, who
guest starred in the 1970's film, "Velvet Smooth," Ace was torn between
choosing a career in music or film.

In 1995, Ace charted in the music industry as
a song producer for the song "Share My Life" and "Changes"
by Columbia Recording Artists, Inner City, as well as, played keyboards for the
Greg Nice produced track "Dirty Dawg" by New Kids On The Block. He
later went on to try his hand as the energetic front man and songwriter for the
alternative rock band WEBSLiNGER. After recording a CD, the band performed in
NYC twice, Los Angeles once, and broke up soon after. During that time, he
managed to teach middle-school English in NYC for close to a decade, before
becoming a director of the Sylvan Learning Center in Northridge, CA. in 2003.

In 2007, Ace became part-owner for the
Hollywood Actors Academy in Hollywood, California, and contributed as an Acting
Coach and Creative Director. But in 2009, while working on the television
series FlashForward, Ace got a taste of light stunt work for the episode,
"Let No Man Put Asunder" and caught the acting bug, again. He has
worked in principal roles for a few independent films, including playing the
role of Prince Thun in AFTRA's Radio Play: Flash Gordon and being Vanessa
Williams' date in ABC's Desperate Housewives.

He was the Vice President of the Greater Los
Angeles Writers Society (2009-2011), and continues to head the Science Fiction,
Fantasy & Horror (ScHoFan) Critique Group as Co-Director of critique groups
within the society. He is also a member of LASFS and the International Thriller
Writers.Ace's true
labor of love is writing Zombie Horror with character-driven plots featuring
female protagonists and he continues to write short stories and build on
the world of Sylva Slasher.

Please visit Ace's website everyday for “Sylva Strips,” which are brief excerpts of the novel
on www.aceantoniohall.com.

National Association of Memoir Writers

About Me

Madeline SharplesI’ve worked most of my professional life as a technical writer, grant writer, and proposal process manager and began writing poetry, essays, and creative non-fiction when my oldest son, Paul, was diagnosed as manic depressive. I continued writing as a way to heal since his death by suicide in 1999. My memoir, "Leaving the Hall Light On," first released on Mother's Day 2011 in hard cover, is about living with my son's bipolar disorder and surviving his suicide. My publisher, Dream of Things, is launching a paperback edition in July 2012 and an eBook in August 2012. I also co-edited Volumes 1 and 2 of "The Great American Poetry Show," a poetry anthology, and wrote the poems for two books of photography, "The Emerging Goddess" and "Intimacy." Besides having many poems published in print and online magazines, I write regularly for several websites: Naturally Savvy, PsychAlive, Open to Hope,and Journeys Through Grief and occasionally for The Huffington Post. I maintain two blogs: Choices and at Red Room.